Tuesday, April 11, 2017

Far-Out Facts

When George Washington became President in 1789, life expectancy
at birth for Americans was 34.5 years for males and 36.5 years for females.

In 1801, when Thomas Jefferson became president, 20 percent of the
people in the U.S. were slaves.

Globally, there are some 1,800 thunderstorms in progress at any
given moment and lightning strikes the planet 100 times every second. Lightning
kills more people in the United States (400 per year) than any other natural
disaster.

An average of 140 tornadoes occurs in the United States every
year. In the spring of 1974, there were a record 90 tornadoes in one day, from
Georgia to Ohio. In 1755, Benjamin Franklin chased a tornado on horseback for
three-quarters of a mile, repeatedly lashing out with his whip in an effort to
calm the storm.

The first formal rules of baseball required the winning team to
score 21 runs.

Baseball pitcher, Hoyt Wilhelm, played 21 seasons for several
major league teams in 1952 to 1972. He hit a home run in his first time at bat
and never hit another one in more than 400 at bats. His career batting average
was .088.

There are more than 10,000 golf courses in the USA.

The Winchester House, near San Jose, California, is 8 stores high
and covers 6 acres of ground. It has 160 rooms, 2,000 doors, 10,000 windows, 48
fireplaces and miles of secret passages and hallways. Mrs. Sara Winchester
believed that if she stopped adding rooms to her house she would die. After 38
years of continual construction, she died in 1922, at age 85.

Ann Arbor, Michigan, has more dentists and more burglaries,
proportionally based on population, than any other city in the USA -- these two
statistics are not related.

New York City has 570 miles of shoreline.

In 1911, after Bobby Leech became the second person to survive a
barrel ride over Niagara Falls, he spent six months in a hospital recovering
from his numerous injuries. He later embarked on a global promotional tour --
in New Zealand, he slipped on a banana peel and died of complications from the
fall.

Three of Theodore Roosevelt's four sons were killed while serving
the USA in wartime -- Quentin was killed on World War I -- Kermit and Theodore,
Jr., were killed in World War II.

Bamboo can grow three feet in 24 hours.

In 1871, the Great Chicago fire killed 300 people -- at the same
time on the same day, a fire some 200 miles north in Peshtigo, Wisconsin,
killed 600 people.

Whiskey and vermouth (a Manhattan cocktail) was invented by a
woman named Jennie Jerome (1854 - 1921), a New York socialite whose father was
millionaire Leonard Jerome and whose great-great grandmother was an Iroquois
Indian. She met Lord Randolph Churchill at a sailing regatta on the Isle of
Wight in 1873, having been introduced by the Prince of Wales (the future King
Edward V11) and they became engaged three days later. They were married at the
British Embassy in Paris in April of 1874. Their son, Winston, was born two
months prematurely in a ladies' cloakroom in a castle in Blenheim, a country
home in Oxfordshire, England, where Jennie was attending a dance. In 1921,
Jennie slipped down a stairway wearing new high-heeled shoes and broke her
ankle. Gangrene set in and her leg was amputated above the knee, whereupon she
died at her home in London 20 days later, at age 67. Her son, Winston
Churchill, went on to become Prime Minister of Great Britain in 1940, during World
War II. He had such a remarkable memory that he was able to recite an entire
Shakespearean play or a lecture verbatim.

In Pacific Grove, California, city ordinance 352 makes it a
misdemeanor to threaten or kill a butterfly.

Of the first 23 U.S. Astronauts who flew on space missions, 21 of
them were first-born sons or an only child.

Mirza Nuruddin Beig Mohammad Khan Salim (1569 - 1627) was the
fourth Mughal Emperor, ruler of India and Pakistan. He was known by his
imperial name as Jahangir, which means Conqueror of the world, and had 500
royal wives. He also had 5,000 woman and 1,000 young men for alternative
pleasure. His pets, stabled near his palace, included 12,000 elephants, 10,000
oxen, 3,000 deer, 2,000 camels, 4,000 dogs, 500 buffalo, 100 tame lions and
10,000 carrier pigeons.

Holy Roman Emperor Charles V once declared, "I speak Spanish
to God, Italian to women, French to men, and German to my horse."

When Adolph Hitler ruled Germany, farmers and policemen were not
allowed to call their horses by the name "Adolph."

Wanting to demean the Jews in Denmark, Adolph Hitler ordered all
Jews to wear a Star of David armband. Soon, Danish citizens of all religions
were wearing the armband. King Christian X of Denmark announced, "I am my
country's first Jew."

After surrendering in 1886 and being imprisoned in Florida and
Alabama, the Apache Chief Geronimo became a member of the Dutch Reformed Church
in Oklahoma, but was later expelled from the church for gambling.

Ernest Hemingway donated his prize money as a Nobel Prize winner
to the Shrine of the Virgin in Cuba. "You don't ever have a thing until
you give it away," he said.

John D. Rockefeller (1839 - 1937) had donated $531,326,842 to
charitable causes during his lifetime.

Ten percent of the earth's land mass (approximately 3.9 million
square miles) is covered permanently under ice.

80% --
Antarctica

12% -- Greenland

8% -- various
mountain peaks & polar islands

Albert Einstein was offered the presidency of Israel but he turned
it down, claiming he had no head for human problems.

Thomas Young (1773 -- 1829) was known as "The Last Man Who
Knew Everything." He could read at age two and read the entire Bible twice
by the age of four. During his youth, he studied 12 languages and could play a
variety of musical instruments. In 1803, he worked out the wave theory of
light. He made many scientific contributions in solid mechanics, light, vision,
physiology, energy, language, musical harmony and Egyptology. He was the first
person to decipher Egyptian hieroglyphics, including the Rosetta Stone.

Writer, Charles Dickens (1812 - 1870), and others, believed that a
person should have their bed aligned from north to south in order to get a good
night's sleep. The theory subscribes to the notion that by sleeping in this
position, magnetic currents flow straight through the body.

Even though he had not lost his eyesight, Thomas Edison preferred
Braille to visual reading.

Christian Heinrich Heinecken (1721 -- 1725) was known as the
"infant scholar of Lubeck (Germany)." When he was eight weeks old, he
could speak German. By age two and a half, he read the entire Bible in Latin.
He had learned Latin and French by age three. When he was three years old, he
authored "A History of Denmark" which he recited when visiting the
King of Denmark later that year. Still being breast fed, he died at age four of
celiac disease.

Kim Ung-Yong, born in March of 1962 in South Korea, was listed in
the Guinness Book of World Records has having the highest IQ, estimated to be
at 210. At age four, he was fluent in Korean, English, German and Japanese, and
also composed and published poetry. When he was Four years and eight months
old, he performed integral calculus on a live TV program in Tokyo.

Alexander Graham Bell was the inventor of the telephone. He was
also a teacher of the deaf and set the world speed record in 1919, at age 72,
by exceeding 70 miles per hour in his hydrofoil boat.

Paul Charles Morphy (1837 -- 1884), born in New Orleans,
Louisiana, was considered to be the greatest chess player in the world by age
21. In 1857, not yet of legal age to begin the practice of law, he participated
in the first American Chess Congress tournament in New York City, where he
defeated all of his opponents (worldwide chess masters) to become the Chess
Champion of the United States. On other occasions, he would even play chess
blindfolded. In a set of eight games of chess, played simultaneously and
blindfolded, he had to remember the positions of 256 chessmen on eight
different chessboards. The number of possible variations of playing just the first
four moves on each side of a chessboard in a game of chess is 318,979,564,000.
In the end, he won six games, lost one and tied one. At age 22, he quit playing
chess to embark on a career as an attorney in New Orleans

In 1903, the first automobile to cross the United States, from San
Francisco to New York, took 52 days.

In 1911, the first coast-to-coast airplane flight in the United
States, from New York to Pasadena, California, by Galbraith P. Rodgers, took 49
days (many stops).

The budget for the U.S. Department of Health, Education and
Welfare is larger than the combined operating expenses of all the governments
of the 50 states in the USA.

In the old Soviet Union, there were over 170 different languages
and dialects.

One of the most original writers in the twentieth century, D.H.
Lawrence, amused himself by removing his clothes and climbing mulberry trees.

A mosquito has 47 teeth. When filled with blood, it is able to fly
carrying a load twice its weight.

In the U.S. military draft lottery in 1917, one of the holders of
the first number (258) was Alden C. Flagg. In the U.S. military draft lottery
of 1940, his son, Alden C. Flagg, Jr., was a holder of the first number (158).

The first French soldier who was wounded in the Franco-Prussian
War was also the last one to be killed, six months later, in 1871.

In 1951, General Douglas MacArthur was dismissed by President
Truman during the Korean War in a dispute over U.S. policy. MacArthur's father,
who fought Geronimo was relieved of his command by President Taft for
insubordination. MacArthur's paternal grandfather defied orders while engaged
in the battle of Missionary Ridge, during the Civil War.

Just prior to World War II, the U.S. Army (including reserves)
ranked nineteenth among the world's armed forces -- behind Portugal and ahead
of Bulgaria.

In the early 1940s, during the development of the atomic bomb in
Alamagordo, New Mexico, applicants for routine jobs (such as janitor) were
disqualified if they could read, in an attempt to keep plans and trash from
being read. Secrecy was paramount.

Half of the world's population lives in just four countries --
China, India, USA, Russia.

In 1935, "Iran" became the new name for what had been
called "Persia" -- prior to being named "Persia," it had
been called "Iran."

Congress had originally appropriated $2 million for the
construction of the Sam Rayburn House Office Building. When it was completed in
1965, the total cost of construction was $88 million.

Martin Van Buren, the eighth President, became the first man born
in the United States to become President.

Jimmy Carter, the thirty-ninth President, was the first U.S.
President born in a hospital. The previous thirty-eight Presidents were all
born at home.

In 1922, Rebecca Felton, a Georgia Democrat, became the first
woman appointed to the U.S. Senate. In 1932, Hattie Caraway, an Arkansas
Democrat became the first woman elected to the U.S. Senate.

In 1869, the Territory of Wyoming allowed women to vote in
territorial elections. When the Territory became a state in 1890, it was
written in the state constitution that women could vote in state and local
elections. In 1925, residents of Wyoming elected Mrs. Nellie Taylor Ross as the
first woman in the U.S. to become a state governor.

In the early eighteenth century, the Church owned two-thirds of
the land in Portugal.

America's most prolific songwriter, Irving Berlin, never learned
how to read or write music. He would sing or hum his songs to a secretary who
would take notes in musical notation. He composed some 3,000 songs. His song
"White Christmas" had sold 113,067,354 records and 5,588,845 copies
of sheet music. His song "God Bless America" was not performed
publically until 20 years later, on Armistice Day in 1938, when Kate Smith introduced
it on radio.

Beethoven was half-deaf most of his life and was totally deaf when
he wrote one of his best pieces of work, the Ninth Symphony.

In 1954, in the state of Indiana, professional wrestlers and
boxers were required to swear under oath that they were not communists.

Professional basketball player, Wilton Norman Chamberlain (1936 -
1999), a.k.a. "Wilt the Stilt," was over seven feet tall and played
13 seasons in the National Basketball Association. A regulation NBA game is 48
minutes. In the 1961-62 season, Chamberlain averaged more than 48 minutes per
game, due to overtime periods, and scored a record 100 points in a single game
that season.

It takes 314 acres of trees (some 63,000 trees) to create the
newsprint on the average Sunday edition of the New York Times.

A Russian Air Force officer, Ivan Mikhailovich Chisov (1911 --
1986), survived a 23,000 fall from a damaged airplane without a parachute. He
fell onto a steep snow-covered slope and slid to the bottom, damaging his spine
and breaking his pelvis.

It takes 13 months to train a pilot, but at the Pentagon's School
of Music it takes 15 months to train to be a bandleader.

In the mid-1960s, movie director-producer Stanley Kubrick
approached Lloyd's of London to obtain insurance against losses if extraterrestrial
intelligence were to be discovered prior to the completion and release of his
forthcoming movie, "2001: A Space Odyssey." Lloyds of London turned
him down.

In August of 1938, Northwestern University conferred an honorary
degree on Charlie McCarthy, who was ventriloquist Edgar Bergen's wooden dummy.

There are a half million more automobiles than people in Los
Angeles.

Half of the people in the U.S. live in 8 of the 50 states.

California

New York

New Jersey

Massachusetts

Pennsylvania

Ohio

Illinois

Michigan

Arlington National Cemetery was once part of the property owned by
Robert E. Lee, south of Washington, D.C. Graves for soldiers were dug close to
Lee's house, and later the area was confiscated. Today, this area is the site
(624 acres) of the National Military Cemetery in Arlington, Virginia.

On April 19, 1861, four members of the Massachusetts Militia were
stoned to death by a Baltimore mob of Confederate sympathizers -- they were the
first four fatalities of the Civil War.

In the late 20th century, about 100 people per day (over age 14)
committed suicide, a 50 percent increase over the previous century.

In 1919, over a million gallons of melted sugar (molasses),
weighing 13,500 tons, was stored in a tank in the harbor area of Boston,
Massachusetts. When the tank ruptured, it sent a 50-foot wave that engulfed
eight buildings, killing 21 people.

According to a study by Brigham Young University, 46 percent of
people die within three months after their birthday, but only 8 percent die
within three months prior to their birthday.

In 1705, a condemned robber in London named John Smith was being
hanged for his crimes. He fell through the drop and dangled at the end of the
rope for about 15 minutes, when a courier arrived on horseback with a reprieve,
setting Smith free, still barely breathing. Thereafter, he was nicknamed
"Half-Hanged Smith."

The most common name in the world is Muhammad.

The original name of Los Angeles was El Pueblo de Nuestra Senora
la Reina de los Angeles de Porciuncula -- meaning "The Village of Our Lady
the Queen of the Angels of Little Portion."

Victoria Woodhull was a radical feminist who ran for the
Presidency in 1872. She spent the last four years of her life sitting in a
chair because she feared she would die in bed in her old age. She died in 1927,
at the age of 89.

Everyone in Iceland must graduate from school and be able to speak
three languages in order to get a job.

In its old English form, the literal meaning of "lady"
is "loaf-kneader."

The Lesser Antilles, West Indies, was once inhabited by Carib
Indians who had three different languages.

One language was
used by men -- women could use it if speaking to a man

One language was
used by women -- men would only use it when quoting or mocking the women

One language was
used by men in councils of war -- never learned by the women

Some 13,700.000 people died in battle in World War I. In the
influenza pandemic that followed in 1918, some 500,000,000 people were ill and
more than 20,000,000 died. While most influenza outbreaks disproportionately
kill the young and elderly, the 1918 pandemic predominantly killed previously
healthy young adults.

There are thousands of languages used around the world. Some 175
languages are spoken by at least a million people. The 10 most spoken
languages, in descending order:

Chinese

English

Russian

Spanish

Hindi

Bengali

Arabic

Portuguese

German

Japanese

There are a zillion more frivolous far-out facts floating around
out there, but I will end the list here -- wouldn't want your head to explode.

"Facts are stubborn things, but statistics are pliable."
Mark Twain

___________

Quote for the Day -- "You can observe
a lot just by watching" Yogi Berra

___________

Bret Burquest is the author
of 11 books. He lives in the Ozark Mountains with a few dogs and where strange
things happen almost daily.

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About Me

Computer Programmer (1972-2002), College Instructor (2001-2006), Newspaper Columnist (2001-2007). Author of 12 books, including ORB OF WOUNDED SOULS, PATH TO FOURTH DENSITY, 11:11 EARTH TIME and BRAIN BLOSSOMS. He lives in the Ozark Mountains, where he writes stuff and talks to trees.